Dellinger was arrested in one while protesting the Vietnam War during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.[2]

The Various Mobilization Committees to End the War in Vietnam

Dave Dellinger was involved in literally all of the major so-called "peace" mobilization committees protesting the Vietnam war which arose out of the original 1966 "Call to Vietnam Week" which became the "Call for a National Student Strike" first proposed by the Communist Party USA's youth front, the W. E. B. DuBois Clubs of America (DuBois Clubs) (DCA), led by Bettina Aptheker, an avowed communist and daughter of CPUSA theoretician Herbert Aptheker.

David Dellinger was elected as a Vice Chairman of the Spring Mobilization Committee (Spring Mobe) at this organizational meeting, and he was described in a House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA) report as follows (Page 34):
"Vice Chairman - David Dellinger, editor of Liberation, which describes itself as a "monthly of revolutionary nonviolence." (A.J. Muste was also an editor of this publication." Dellinger is a self-proclaimed pacifist, a defender of Castro's regime in Cuba, a supporter of the Fair Play For Cuba Committee (FPFCC) and similar groups. Last fall he made a world tour which included visits to Moscow, Peking and Hanoi. He visited the last two named Communist capitals despite the fact that the State Department had not validated his passport for travel to Red China or North Vietnam".[3].

People's Peace Treaty

The People's Peace Treaty (PPT) was a fraudulent document of "peace" between the leftist-led National Student Association (NSA) of the US and several North Vietnamese communist "student" fronts, as well as with the [[National Liberation Front/SV], the political wing of Hanoi's Lao Dong Party in South Vietnam and the Lao Dong Party of North Vietnamese itself.

The organization behind this "peace treaty" placed a nearly full page ad in the New York Times (NYT) of March 7, 1971, Sunday edition, Page 7, starting with a quote by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, August, 1959 which said "People want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out of their way and let them have it." [The quote was referring to the Captive Nations of the Soviet Bloc, North Korea and Red China (which had just invaded Tibet and conquerred it).

There is a Keywiki page for the CCI which lists all its leaders, Sponsors, and their National Coordinating Committee including Jane Fonda and Jeremy Rifkin.
A Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the founding conference of New Mobe can be found in the "Extent of Subversion in Campus Disorders: Testimony of Max Phillip Friedman", Part 2, Aug. 12, 1969 (Executive Session, released Oct. 15, 1969), 91st Congress, 1st Session.

In all these publications, many more details on the "Mobe" and PCPJ activities of David Dellinger can be found, along with those key Mobe leaders whose true identities as various types of communists/Marxists were not presented or known in the earlier hearings, as well as their direct ties to North Vietnam in support of Hanoi's efforts to conquer South Vietnam (and Laos, with their troops in Cambodia in support of the murderous Khmer Rouge).

Palestine Human Rights Campaign

A brochure came out in early 1978 announcing "A National Organizing Conference" sponsored by the Palestine Human Rights Campaign to be held on May 20-21, 1978, at American University, with the theme of "Palestinian Human Rights and Peace".

The list of "Sponsors" was a mix of a several groupings including the Communist Party USA and its sympathizers, the World Peace Council, the Hanoi Lobby, black extremists, mainly marxists, radical Christians, and Arab/Arab-American organizations, plus a few phone-booth sized pro-Palestinian Christian groups.